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Your support powers every story we tell. We're committed to producing high-quality, fact-based news and information that gives you the facts in this community we call home. If our work has helped you stay informed, take action, or feel more connected to Windham County – please give now to help us reach our goal of raising $150,000 by December 31st.

BRATTLEBORO

Weather

View 7-day forecast

Weather sponsored by

Your support powers every story we tell. Please help us reach our year-end goal.

Donate Now

Your support powers every story we tell. We're committed to producing high-quality, fact-based news and information that gives you the facts in this community we call home. If our work has helped you stay informed, take action, or feel more connected to Windham County – please give now to help us reach our goal of raising $150,000 by December 31st.

Scholarships available for women

The Brattleboro Branch of the American Association of University Women (AAUW) is celebrating 70 years of academic financial assistance for women and girls by again offering scholarships of up to $1,000 each to qualified female candidates who have been legal residents Windham County for at least two years.

Graduating high school seniors from area high schools, preparatory schools, or home schools and women who are considered college ready by federal financial aid guidelines are eligible to apply. Applications will be judged on academic performance, community involvement, and financial need.

The applicant must be accepted or enrolled as an undergraduate student in a one-year certificate or two- or four-year accredited college degree program for 2022–23.

Guidance counselors in area high schools have posters and application forms. They can also be obtained from area college financial aid offices or by contacting the AAUW scholarship committee at nrshakun@gmail.com or grussgot@sover.net.

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Stage 33 hosts Dan and Faith on March 27

Multi-instrumentalist duo Dan and Faith return to Stage 33 Live, 33 Bridge St., for an intimate performance on Sunday, March 27, at 7 p.m. The husband-and-wife duo are old-school-folk singer-songwriter-storytellers whose writing and delivery have a direct line of descent from the earnest coffeehouse scene of the early 1960s...

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Funding available for failed wells and septic systems

The Vermont Agency of Natural Resources is providing $1 million in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding to support low- and moderate-income Vermont homeowners in repairing or replacing their failed or inadequate on-site water (well) or wastewater (septic) systems. Eligible homeowners with failed or inadequate wells, springs, septic tanks,

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Vermont Theatre Company to hold auditions on April 3, 4

The Vermont Theatre Company announces auditions for their upcoming production of The Servant of Two Masters, written by Carlo Goldoni and translated and adapted by Jeffry Hatcher and Paolo Emilio Landi. Auditions will be held Sunday, April 3, 10 a.m., at the Hooker-Dunham Theater and Gallery in Brattleboro, and Monday, April 4, 5 p.m., at the Evening Star Grange in Dummerston Center. The Servant of Two Masters is a modern Italian commedia adapted from Carlo Goldini's play written in 1743.

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First Wednesday event examines girlhood and womanhood in America

April's First Wednesday event at Brooks Memorial Library, 224 Main St., is “The Poetics of Girlhood and Womanhood in America,” and takes place live, April 6 at 7 p.m. Poets and writers Diana Whitney and Shanta Lee Gander will join Christal Brown, associate professor of dance at Middlebury College, in a conversation that explores how girlhood and womanhood in America are manifested across the boundaries of poetry, dance, and lived experience. Diana Whitney's edited work, You Don't Have to Be...

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Speno had a chance that night to mend a fractured community. He failed.

On March 8, the newly seated Windham Southeast School District board heard from several parents who, with only six days before the school mask mandate was to be lifted, had still not been able to learn from administrators what plans would be in place to protect their children who are too young to be vaccinated, are immunocompromised, or are otherwise at high-risk for complications from exposure to COVID-19. These were not calls to keep everyone's mask on. Instead, these parents...

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Yes — but what about the atrocities in Yemen?

The vicious seven-year war on Yemen by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates is an ongoing humanitarian crisis aided and abetted by the United States. The media and the U.S. Congress decry Russia's imperial destruction of Ukraine. Yes - but what about the atrocities in Yemen? The U.S. supplies the majority of weapons that kill the children, women, and men of Yemen. The military-industrial-media complex is thriving under Biden and the Democratic congressional leadership. Hypocrisy is also thriving. According...

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Dozens push WSESD board to hire interim supt. for the duration

The topic of about 70 minutes of public comment at a recent Windham Southeast School District school board meeting was the future career of Interim Superintendent Mark Speno, who attended the meeting but said nothing. On March 16 - the night after 300 people jammed Zoom for the WSESD school board public forum to discuss masking [story, A5] - 175 people were again on Zoom. Approximately 50 people - mostly students and school officials - attended in person. Public comment...

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Milestones

Obituaries • Clayton Patrick Benjamin, 86, formerly of Hinsdale, N.H. Died March 12, 2022 at Applewood Healthcare in Winchester, N.H. Born March 17, 1935 in Ellenburg Depot, N.Y., the son of Halsey and Eva (Jarvis) Benjamin, he was raised and educated in Brattleboro, graduating from St. Michael's High School with the Class of 1954. In 1955, he enlisted in the Navy, serving on board the USS Randolph. In 1957, he was honorably discharged from active service and then worked as...

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Bears are out and about early; time to take down bird feeders

The Vermont Fish and Wildlife (F&W) Department says warm spring weather and melting snows will cause bears to come out of their winter dens in search of food. The department recommends taking down and storing bird feeders until December to avoid attracting bears. “Although we typically recommend taking down bird feeders by April 1, we are asking Vermonters to take them down early this year,” Jaclyn Comeau, the department's bear biologist said in a news release. The department is already...

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World Affairs Council looks at ongoing war in Yemen

On Friday, March 25, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. via Zoom, Windham World Affairs Council in partnership with Action Corps will present a panel discussion to mark seven years of war in Yemen. Vermont peace activists, Yemeni Americans, and local leaders will come together to discuss the humanitarian crisis in Yemen, the war that has caused it, and what Vermonters and everyday people around the world are doing to stop the U.S.-backed bombing and blockade of the country. Yemen has...

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Seven Times Salt salutes ‘The Winter Queen’ March 27 at BMC

Boston-based Seven Times Salt joins Brattleboro Music Center regulars In Stile Moderno for what organizers are calling “a delightful new concert program,” Sunday, March 27, at 4 p.m. “Fair Phoenix: Tales of the Winter Queen” focuses on the story of Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia. The program will follow her life story with music from England on the occasion of her wedding in 1613, music “borne of religious anguish during the Thirty Years' War, and finally music of mourning and...

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Around the Towns

Monthly free produce available March 24 PUTNEY - The Vermont Foodbank and the Putney Foodshelf will co-sponsor the next monthly drop of free produce and some nonperishables on Thursday, March 24, from 9 to 9:45 a.m. at Putney Meadows, 17 Carol Brown Way (the white building across from the Putney Food Co-op and the fire station). All are welcome. Because of COVID-19, remain in your car at pickup, and volunteers will bring out bags. Brattleboro seeks new WRC representative BRATLTEBORO...

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Comedy returns to Next Stage

Gordon Clark and his Vermont Comedy All Stars return for a night of stand-up comedy Friday, March 25, at 7:30 p.m., at Next Stage Arts. Featured performers will include several contest-winning and touring comedians most often seen in the Burlington area. “We all need reasons to laugh, and the Vermont Comedy All Stars do an outstanding job,” Keith Marks, executive director of Next Stage Arts, said in a news release. “Comedians will be coming from all around the state to...

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Auction for Afghan refugees nearly quadruples its goal

A flurry of local internet-based activity in the recent online auction to benefit the St. Michael's Interfaith Refugee Fund has gratified all involved. “This auction had the modest goal of raising $2,000,” St. Michael's Episcopal organizer Liz Vick said in a news release. “In the end, it brought in $7,547, all of which will be used to facilitate the resettlement of families and single people from Afghanistan who have been arriving in Southern Vermont since January.” Vick said many local...

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Area ‘resiliency zones’ earn federal funding

Windham Regional Commission (WRC) is set to receive funding through Congressionally directed spending supported by Sen. Bernie Sanders to help towns in southeast Vermont plan Resiliency Zones. This innovative work to increase resiliency in the face of climate change is a collaboration between WRC and Green Mountain Power (GMP). According to a news release, Resiliency Zones are a part of GMP's proactive climate plan “to work directly with partner communities to strengthen the grid, help prevent outages, and bounce back...

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WSESU schools drop holdout mask mandate

The Windham Southeast School District will belatedly join the rest of the state in making classroom masks a choice after a special meeting crowd of more than 500 people registered nearly three hours of complaint. At first, Brattleboro Union High School and elementary classrooms in Brattleboro, Dummerston, Guilford, and Putney told families they would adopt the Vermont Agency of Education's new relaxed Covid-19 recommendations beginning March 14. “We have followed the guidance set out by our local health professionals from...

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Vermont Everyone Eats funding extended through July 1

Vermont Everyone Eats (VEE), the unique COVID-19 recovery program that provides Vermonters impacted by Covid with prepared meals made by area restaurants using locally grown and produced ingredients, will continue through July 1. The program had previously been set to end on March 31, but will now continue due to FEMA's 100 percent cost share being extended for existing COVID-19 relief programs. Since August 2020, VEE has provided over 2.25 million meals statewide, entirely paid for with nearly $30 million...

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For Brattleboro meeting members, no free lunch

Elected Town Meeting representatives spurned a call to feed themselves a $2,500 tax-funded lunch. But that didn't stop them from spending 12 hours on March 19 chewing over $20 million in municipal matters. “Democracy is messy, and it can be frustrating,” Prudence MacKinney, vice chair of the Planning Commission, told a Zoom audience at the start of Vermont's only state-sanctioned virtual Town Meeting. “It takes time and effort to work well.” It also requires fuel, according to a Town Meeting...

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Sanders: Join Welch with Yemen War Powers Resolution in Senate

On the day that the invasion of Ukraine began, there were 37 separate airstrikes on Yemen. Airstrikes are frequent there, day and night. The U.S. has backed this destruction for seven years. Our country supplies and supports the weapons, ammunition, and military intelligence that batters people on the other side of the world, out of our sight. We fund and facilitate those devastating airstrikes. The United Nations lists 17 countries in crisis, with millions of fellow humans around the world...

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Look beyond raising short-term interest rates as a response to inflation

In the wake of the Federal Reserve Board's recent decision to raise short-term interest rates (and indications that they plan to further raise rates over the coming year), I am concerned that our national conversation about responses to inflation has been unduly constrained. Among the many possible responses to rising inflation (specifically, the demand-induced inflation we are currently experiencing because of excess liquidity, or “too many dollars chasing too few goods”), there are two main possibilities: Option A: Raise interest...

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Americans have no right to be on our high horse while we oppose the war in Ukraine

A large country, armed to the teeth, entering into the dusk as a superpower, makes outlandish claims about another, much smaller and weaker country. The rest of the world's nations scratch their heads and wonder at these claims. The large country amasses troops and armaments near the smaller country. It gives the smaller country an ultimatum that cannot be met because it is based on a false premise. Very few other nations are interested in joining the bellicosity of the...

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Lorkin O'Reilly, Melanie MacLaren play Gaelic roots-inspired folk at Epison Spires

March is traditionally a time for shamrock decorations and pints of green beer, but this year Epsilon Spires is offering an opportunity to celebrate the season of Saint Patrick's Day a little differently with a live performance of Lorkin O'Reilly's Irish-inspired original folk music on the evening of Saturday, March 26. Joining him on the bill will be Melanie MacLaren, a singer-songwriter raised in New York who moved to Nashville in 2020. “O'Reilly's breathy vocal delivery and hypnotically rhythmic guitar...

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We never stood still

Before my life began, I was already an immigrant. My family emigrated in 1996, during the time of the first government of the Taliban in Afghanistan. Day by day, the political, social, and economic situations - all the parts of the society that touched on our lives - were getting worse. As a result, lots of families couldn't live in Afghanistan anymore. My family was among them. My mom, one month pregnant with me, immigrated to Iran. * * *

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All-star honors abound for local athletes

The annual North-South All-Star games, presented by the Vermont Basketball Coaches' Association (WBCA), were held March 19 at Champlain Valley Union High School in Hinesburg. It was the first time in two years that the games were played, as the COVID-19 pandemic forced the cancellation of the 2020 and 2021 editions. There were seven local seniors chosen for the South's all-star teams. For the girls, Brattleboro's Kiki McNary and Chloe Givens played in the Division I-II girls' game, while Julia...

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Putney permits housing project; opponents plan to appeal

While Windham & Windsor Housing Trust (WWHT) has received a local zoning permit from the town to move forward and build a 25-unit affordable housing complex on Alice Holway Drive adjacent to the Putney Community Gardens, opponents are appealing the decision. The permit, issued by the Putney Development Review Board (DRB) on March 9, allows the land to be subdivided into two parcels. The southern parcel is dedicated to the new housing community with two energy-efficient, all-electric buildings with a...

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BMAC presents online talk by artist M. Carmen Lane

The Brattleboro Museum & Art Center (BMAC) will present a free talk by artist M. Carmen Lane on Thursday, March 31, at 7 p.m. via Zoom and Facebook Live. Register at brattleboromuseum.org. Lane will discuss the BMAC exhibit “(í:se)Be Our Guest/Stolen,” an examination of the intergenerational trauma of Indigenous displacements and Black fugitive migrations, through the lens of the artist's Afro-Indigenous family history. Lane will explore the host/guest relationship, family fracturing and splintering, and the history of displacement of Black...

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Brattleboro Memorial Hospital appoints new CEO

On March 18, the Board of Directors of Brattleboro Memorial Hospital (BMH) announced the appointment of Christopher J. Dougherty as the organization's new president and chief executive officer, effective May 9. Dougherty succeeds outgoing CEO Steven R. Gordon, who will retire in April after serving 11 years in that post. “We'd like to extend a very warm welcome to Chris Dougherty, who throughout his career has been known for his inclusive leadership style, impressive financial accomplishments, and the successful outcomes...

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We are talking about neighbors and loved ones

Hundreds of Windham County residents - children, veterans, seniors, young adults, the employed and the unemployed, are living in a state of homelessness. An extremely disproportionate number identify as BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color). People are unable to find a place to live and when apartments do open up, they are often far beyond the price range of the average earner. Vermont has been underdeveloping housing for over 40 years. With the increase in demand during COVID-19 and the...

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How many children must die?

It is surreal. For weeks now I've been watching a war in Europe in the 21st century in real time. It's an utterly dystopian experience to witness the destruction of a modern, democratic country with more than 40 million people who simply want to live their lives, raise their children, do their jobs, love their families. A month ago, they were sitting in cafés, walking their dogs, hugging their kids, sleeping next to their partners, caring for their parents and...

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Mud season hits hard this year

It's Vermont's fifth season - mud season - and it's in full swing this year like none other. “The annual mud season in Marlboro is especially bad this year,” resident Adrian Segar wrote on a public Facebook post on Monday in one of innumerable dispatches from residents on the social media platform. “The town's 60 miles of dirt roads are essentially unpassable,” he continued. “School is canceled today because the school buses can't get through. We got a car out...

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